A live display developed by scientists from the University of St Andrews will allow visitors to monitor the live search for planets, and perhaps even witness the discovery of a new world at the 2008 Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition.
Dr Martin Dominik, Royal Society University Research Fellow at the University of St Andrews and lead developer said, "In less than 15 years, the number of planets known outside the Solar system has risen from none to more than 300.
"Now we turn the search for other worlds into a public event. Rather than confining current information about ongoing experiments to the walls of our laboratories, we allow anyone to see what we are doing and watch potentially exciting discoveries developing."
The St Andrews team employs a technique called gravitational microlensing in their hunt for planets orbiting stars other than the Sun.
Dr Dominik, of the School of Physics & Astronomy explained, "The detection of planets by gravitational microlensing means that we are waiting for a short blip in the light of an observed star that results from the gravitational bending by the planet and its host star which intervene the line of sight."
Using this technique, the St Andrews planet hunters made essential contributions to the detection of planet OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb, which was, at the time of its discovery, the most Earth-like extra-solar planet known, providing the first observational hint at such planets being common in the Universe.
Dr Dominik continued, "Gravitational microlensing is a promising approach towards the first detection of an Earth-mass planet, which could happen at any time now. In fact, microlensing is the only technique that can currently detect planets substantially below the mass of Earth."
Within minutes of the observations being completed, the respective data are modelled and visualized, providing information to members of the public and to the scientists simultaneously. Moreover, any potential planetary signal is readily identified to ensure that planets are properly identified or dismissed.
The underlying software is an integral part of the expert system constituting the core of ARTEMiS (Automated Robotic Terrestrial Exoplanet Microlensing Search), coordinated by Dr Dominik. The data themselves flow in from all current microlensing observing campaigns that monitor stars in the central regions of the Milky Way in the hunt for planets, with the St Andrews astronomers playing key roles in several of these.
Prof Keith Horne, who pioneered the use of robotic-telescope networks for microlensing planet searches, said, "Robotic Telescopes were always extremely cost-efficient and allowed human resources to be spent on the science rather than manual tasks.
"Now that powerful software is being put in place, we are ready to move forward with a next generation of microlensing planet searches for which human judgement would be incapable of keeping track with the acquired volume of data."
For all those unable to visit the exhibition in London, live planet hunting and further information will be available on
http://www.artemis-uk.org/targetview.html
Dr Dominik said, "We also do home delivery. Live planet hunting by microlensing is also shown on the web along with further information."
Source: University of St Andrews
Related stories:
Newly discovered extrasolar planet is the smallest known and has smallest host star
Astronomers have discovered an extrasolar planet only three times more massive than our own, the smallest yet observed orbiting a normal star. The star itself is not large, perhaps as little as one twentieth the mass of our Sun, suggesting to the research team that relatively common low-mass stars may present good candidates for hosting Earth-like planets.
New rocky planet found in constellation Leo
Spanish and UCL (University College London) scientists have discovered a possible terrestrial-type planet orbiting a star in the constellation of Leo. The new planet, which lies at a distance of 30 light years from the Earth, has a mass five times that of our planet but is the smallest found to date. One full day on the new planet would be equivalent to three weeks on Earth.
Astronomers discover scaled-down Jupiter and Saturn in a faraway solar system like our own
An international team of astronomers has discovered two planets that resemble smaller versions of Jupiter and Saturn in a solar system nearly 5,000 light years away. The find suggests that our galaxy hosts many planetary systems like our own, said Scott Gaudi, assistant professor of astronomy at Ohio State University.
Astronomers eager to add to Sky in Google Earth
Since Sky in Google Earth debuted two weeks ago to let the public explore the heavens from their computers, two University of California, Berkeley, astronomers have jumped in to populate Google's sky with the most recently discovered heavenly objects.
Hubble Identifies Stellar Companion to Distant Planet
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has for the first time identified the parent star of a distant planet discovered through gravitational microlensing.
Forming super-Earths by ultraviolet stripping
A new explanation for forming "super-Earths" suggests that they are more likely to be found orbiting red dwarf stars--the most abundant type of star--than gas giant planets like Jupiter and Saturn. The theory, by Dr. Alan Boss of the Carnegie Institution's Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, describes a mechanism whereby UV radiation from a nearby massive star strips off a planet's gaseous envelope exposing a super-Earth. The work, published in the June 10, 2006,
Astrophysical Journal Letters, explains recent extrasolar planet discoveries by the microlensing method.
New Icy 'Super-Earth' Planet Found
An international collaboration of astronomers has discovered a "super-Earth" orbiting in the cold outer regions of a distant solar system about 9,000 light-years away. The planet weighs 13 times as much as Earth, and at -330 degrees Fahrenheit, it's one of the coldest planets ever discovered outside our solar system.
Icy exoplanet brings astronomers closer to home
Major Scientific Discovery on Extrasolar Planets
Using a relatively new planet-hunting technique that can spot worlds one-tenth the mass of our own, researchers have discovered a potentially rocky, icy body that may be the smallest planet yet found orbiting a star outside our solar system. The discovery suggests the technique, gravitational microlensing, may be an exceptional technology for finding distant planets with traits that could support life.